A book that addresses everything
From life, through love, longing, and separation, all the way to death
He addresses the human heart to reconsider monitoring his actions towards God, getting closer to Him and himself, charging his soul with positive energy, and drawing a smile in every step.
The book talks about the martyrs of September 4 / the martyrs of the United Arab Emirates... To the pure souls who spent their lives in good deeds and deeds, to those bodies that placed the insignia of the Armed Forces and the flag of the United Arab Emirates on their honorable arms, to you, martyr... all the love, appreciation and military salute that we offer with all love and reverence. May God have mercy on you, oh righteous sons of Zayed. May God have mercy on you.
There are few writers who have chronicled with such honest clarity and such bold honesty the development of the soul through the stages of life. Peter Kamintsend (1904), Damian (1919), Siddhartha (1922), The Steppenwolf (1927), Narcissus and Goldmund (1930), and The Journey to the East (1932) are different versions of a spiritual autobiography, and different depictions of the path of Joan. Each new step refines the image of all previous steps, and each experience opens new worlds of exploration in a continuous effort to communicate the vision.
Hermann Hesse, winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1962, was closely connected to the Indian world. He was influenced by Eastern philosophies. When he was once asked about the most important influences in his life, he said that they were “the Christian and never nationalistic spirit of my parents’ house,” “reading Chinese masterpieces,” and “the personality of the historian Jacob Burckhardt.”